Azerbaijan, Armenia Agree to Cease-Fire Beginning Sunday

Voice of America
Oct 17 2020
By VOA News
Updated 05:04 PM

Azerbaijan and Armenia announced Saturday that they had agreed to a new cease-fire beginning at midnight, the second attempt in a week to temper almost three weeks of fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh.

"The Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan have agreed to a humanitarian truce as of October 18, 00h00 local time," Armenia's foreign ministry said late Saturday.

Azerbaijan's foreign ministry issued an identical statement.

The announcements came after Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke by phone with his Armenian and Azeri counterparts. Lavrov and French President Emmanuel Macron both stressed that the cease-fire must be strictly observed by both sides.

Earlier Saturday, Azerbaijan and Armenia accused each other of new attacks, a further indication that violence has escalated in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in violation of a Russian-brokered truce that took effect a week ago.

Authorities in Azerbaijan said an Armenian missile attack on the city of Ganja killed at least 13 people and wounded 50 others in early hours of Saturday, while Armenia accused Azerbaijan of more shelling.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said that the cities of Ganja and Mingachevir were hit with missiles fired from two locations in Armenia.

According to official sources in Azerbaijan, Saturday’s missile attacks destroyed at least 20 residential buildings in Ganja, the country’s second-largest city.

The Armenian defense ministry denied carrying out the strikes and accused Azerbaijan of continuing to shell populated areas in Nagorno-Karabakh, including its largest city, Stepanakert.

The Armenian foreign ministry said three civilians were injured in a fire resulting from Azerbaijan’s attacks.

Armenia also accused Azerbaijan of flying drones over Armenian settlements, attacking military installations and damaging civilian infrastructure.

The U.N. Children’s Fund, meanwhile, called Saturday for an immediate humanitarian cease-fire, declaring in a statement that children have been killed, injured and displaced by the fighting, forcing them to endure weeks of “extreme psychological trauma and distress.”

“Children, families and the civilian facilities that they depend upon must be protected, in line with international human rights and humanitarian law. A complete cessation of hostilities is in the best interest of all children,” the statement said.

The fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted Sept. 27 and has killed hundreds of people, marking the biggest escalation of the decades-old conflict over breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh since a 1994 cease-fire.

The predominantly ethnic Armenian territory declared its independence from Azerbaijan in 1991 during the collapse of the Soviet Union, sparking a war that claimed the lives of as many as 30,000 people before a 1994 cease-fire. However, that independence is not internationally recognized.


Fighting Eases, Briefly, After Cease-Fire Between Armenia and Azerbaijan

New York Times
Oct 10 2020

The Armenian Defense Ministry said most of the front line was “relatively calm.” But renewed shelling was reported at night.

By


GORIS, Armenia — Fierce fighting over a breakaway Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan partly subsided on Saturday after a cease-fire took effect. But there was little expectation of a durable peace two weeks into the most violent conflict that the volatile region has seen in decades.

The cease-fire agreement, reached by Armenia and Azerbaijan in Moscow early Saturday after 10 hours of overnight talks, raised hopes of at least a brief respite in the artillery bombardment, drone strikes and trench warfare that have killed hundreds since Azerbaijan launched an offensive on Sept. 27.

Each side accused the other of mounting new attacks after the cease-fire took effect at noon on Saturday. But eyewitnesses reported no shelling in the enclave’s capital, Stepanakert, for much of the afternoon and evening, and the Armenian Defense Ministry said most of the front line was “relatively calm.”

Shortly before midnight Saturday, though, people in Stepanakert said they heard a series of explosions and the wail of air raid sirens, suggesting the cease-fire was teetering just 12 hours after it came into force. Around the same time, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said the Azerbaijani town of Terter, near the border of the enclave, had come under attack.

Earlier in the day, the International Committee of the Red Cross said it stood ready to use the lull to retrieve the remains of the dead at the front line, where the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh borders Azerbaijani-controlled territory. Emergency services workers fanned out looking for unexploded ordnance, a journalist based in the city, Gegham Baghdasaryan, said in a telephone interview.

Nagorno-Karabakh, with a population of about 150,000, is a landlocked territory in the Caucasus, the mountain range where Europe meets Asia, between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. The territory, smaller than Connecticut, has little geostrategic significance on its own, but is the subject of an escalating test of strength among regional powers.

Russia, Iran and an increasingly assertive Turkey have all been jockeying for influence in the region.

“I hope that the world’s power centers will find enough means of influence on Azerbaijan to have it abide by the cease-fire,” Mr. Baghdasaryan said.

The enclave is part of Azerbaijan under international law, but has been controlled by a breakaway government closely aligned with Armenia since a yearslong war over the territory in the early 1990s. About 20,000 people were killed, and about a million, mostly Azerbaijanis, were displaced in that war.

RUSSIA

GEORGIA

Caspian

Sea

ARMENIA

NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Baku

AZERBAIJAN

TURKEY

IRAN

AZER.

(NAKCHIVAN)

50 Miles

By The New York Times

Azerbaijan says it is now fighting to reclaim land that rightfully belongs to the country, while Armenia says ceding the land to Azerbaijan could bring about the destruction of the Armenian population in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Neither side appears in a mood to compromise, with rhetoric from all parties having grown harsher in recent months. The current war has already killed more than 400 Armenian soldiers and, according to the United Nations, more than 50 civilians; Azerbaijan has not disclosed its military casualties.

“This war did not surprise anyone here,” said Zaur Shiriyev, an analyst with the International Crisis Group based in the Azerbaijani capital, Baku. “No one actually questions why it’s happening now.”

Mr. Shiriyev said he did not expect the cease-fire to hold for long, in part because the agreement announced in Moscow early Saturday morning contained no specifics on geography or timing.

“It can be declared inoperative at any time,” he said.

Image

Repairing electricity lines in Stepanakert on Saturday.Credit…Aris Messinis/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Turkey, a member of NATO, is Azerbaijan’s major ally in the region. It is now challenging Russia’s longtime geopolitical primacy in the southern Caucasus, which was part of the Soviet Union.

Russia has a mutual-defense treaty with Armenia and maintains a military base there, but has also nurtured close ties with Azerbaijan.

The region’s southern neighbor, Iran, is also a major player, and President Hassan Rouhani of Iran called President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Saturday to discuss the conflict, the Kremlin said.

Whether or not the cease-fire, which was brokered by Russia, holds will test Mr. Putin’s ability to influence events in his country’s post-Soviet neighborhood.

Azerbaijan insists Armenia must withdraw its troops from Nagorno-Karabakh if it wants peace. The foreign minister of Azerbaijan, Jeyhun Bayramov, warned Saturday that his country was prepared to continue fighting, while Turkey said it would stand by “brotherly Azerbaijan” on the battlefield and at the negotiating table.

“Azerbaijan has shown Armenia and the whole world that it has the ability and the self confidence to reclaim its territories under occupation for nearly 30 years,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry said Saturday. By agreeing to the cease-fire, the ministry said, “Azerbaijan gave Armenia a last opportunity to withdraw from the territories it has occupied.”

State Senator Borgeas Hosts Video Discussion on Artsakh Military Conflict in Artsakh

October 8,  2020



California State Senator Andreas Borgeas

FRESNO—Senator Andreas Borgeas (R-Fresno) was joined by Robert Avetisyan, Permanent Representative of the Republic of Artsakh to the United States, and Berj Apkarian, the Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia in Fresno, via Zoom to provide an historical overview of Armenia and Artsakh as well as current acts of aggression by Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Avetisyan was live on the call as Azeri forces were shelling Stepanakert, Artsakh’s capital.

The discussion is an hour in length and provides a comprehensive, academic analysis on Armenia/Artsakh-related issues.

“As indicated in my earlier statement on September 28, we stand with the people of Armenia, Artsakh and the Armenian diaspora during this difficult time,” said Senator Borgeas. “My hope is our discussion provides an understanding of the plight of the Armenian people and the events that led up to this conflict.”

Senator Borgeas is a member of the California Legislative Armenian Caucus and also sits on the Select Committee on California, Armenia & Artsakh Affairs. He has been deeply involved in Caucasus-related issues during his public service career, including twice as a political observer verifying the authenticity of two democratic elections in Artsakh.

The discussion aired on Sen. Borgeas Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/SenatorBorgeas on Thursday.

Rising Armenia-Azerbaijan tensions pose big questions of EU

The Irish Times
Oct 8 2020
s a group of office workers in the Brussels bubble prepared to wind down for the weekend last Friday, an email appeared in their inboxes that made them sit up. It was a note from a colleague announcing he was taking a leave of absence to go to war. 

His native Armenia had declared martial law and universal military mobilisation of able citizens aged over 18. He had been summoned to serve his nation, he wrote, “and I proudly take it as an honour”.

This jolt to the heart of Brussels sums up how the burgeoning conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan has implications that reach across Europe.

This is because the dispute – though it centres on a remote region with the unfamiliar name of Nagorno-Karabakh – involves the interests of a knot of large military powers that are already set against each other in theatres of conflict elsewhere.

The conflict has its roots in the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1980s, when the ethnic Armenian majority in Nagorno-Karabakh began agitating to become part of Armenia or be independent, despite the territory coming to be internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan.

The ensuing war killed tens of thousands. Sporadic clashes between the two neighbours have continued since a peace deal was reached in 1994, with Moscow maintaining regional dominance and selling weapons to both sides.

Nato member Turkey has an interest too, sharing close ethnic ties with Azerbaijan, as well as mutual antipathy towards Armenia. This week Turkish foreign minister Mevlüt Çavusoglu travelled to the capital, Baku, to express solidarity with Azerbaijan as it sounded a martial note. 

The policy reflects the increased assertiveness of the regime of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan from Cyprus to Libya to Syria, as it seeks leverage over rivals and increased influence across a region where it historically held sway. Its involvement in the latest conflict opens up yet another area in the EU’s neighbourhood in which Turkey and Russia are on opposite sides of a proxy fight.

“There is a coming collision course between Turkey and Russia in this region. Turkey has been forced out as a player in the region years ago by Russia … Turkey sees an opportunity geopolitically to regain its lost role,” says Richard Giragosian, director of the Armenia-based Regional Studies Center.

“Erdogan is very much the same kind of authoritarian risk-taker as Vladimir Putin. Clash of the titans, or clash of the titanic egos,” he adds. “This is the inherent threat to Europe, which is already unprepared to deal with Victor Orban in Hungary, and these authoritarian strongman policies.”

Meanwhile, there is the matter of Armenia and Azerbaijan’s other neighbour: Iran, which is home to communities with origins in both. 

Tehran has complained of rocket fire and bullets spilling into its territory from the fighting. On Wednesday, Iranian president Hassan Rouhani issued a warning that it would not tolerate “terrorists” on its borders following reports that Turkey had moved Syrian mercenary fighters into Azerbaijan.

“We must be careful that this war does not turn into a regional war and those who pour gasoline on this war should pay attention that its continuation is not in the interest of any country,” Rouhani said in a statement issued by the government.

Each power involved may feel compelled to intervene to protect their interests, a combination that has drawn comparisons to the domino effect that caused the assassination of an archduke to lead to the first World War.

With the United States distracted and in a phase of withdrawal from overseas concerns, attention has turned to Brussels to see if the European Union is willing – or able – to bear an influence to prevent deepening instability in what it refers to as its “eastern neighbourhood”.

The bloc quickly called for peaceful dialogue and released €500,000 in humanitarian aid for the civilian populations affected by the fighting on both sides.

But on Wednesday, EU chief diplomat Josep Borrell faced calls to do more as he was summoned to give an account of the European Commission’s response by the European Parliament.

The debate began with an intervention by Cypriot MEP Lefteris Christoforou, who appealed for an immediate response to a new incursion into a disputed area of the divided island by the Turkish side. One after another MEPs called for the EU to do more. But Borrell responded with characteristic frankness about the hard power limitations of the bloc.

“All of you have been asking to act, but I have heard very few concrete versions of the verb ‘act’. What do you mean by ‘act’?” Borrell asked the MEPs. The bloc’s response to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, he explained, would be what had been agreed by the national leaders of the EU: to support the OSCE Minsk Group, the mediating body that has sought to broker peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia since 1992.

This means “a negotiated solution, pushing both sides to stop the fighting, and especially putting pressure on Turkey to not continue to intervene”, Borrell summarised. “But to ‘act’ – if you mean by ‘act’ taking military action – is completely out of the question.”

‘Turkey has a clear objective of reinstating the Turkish empire’, Armenian PM says

France 24
Oct 3 2020
 
 
 
'Turkey has a clear objective of reinstating the Turkish empire',
Armenian PM says
 
 Heavy fighting escalated this week between Armenian and Azerbaijan forces over the disputed separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On Friday, global leaders renewed calls for a ceasefire with French President Emmanuel Macron pressing for a fresh round of peace talks. In an interview with FRANCE 24’s Gulliver Cragg in Yerevan, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sat down to discuss the crisis embroiling his country.
 
 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told FRANCE 24 that Turkey would continue its expansionist footprint and its goal of  “the genocide of Armenians”.
 
“Armenia is the last obstacle in the way of Turkey and their expansion towards the north, and the east,” Mr Pashinyan said.
 
He pointed to recent evidence of Turkish aggression in the Mediterranean Sea towards Greece and involvement in Syria and Iraq.
 
“Turkey has a clear objective of reinstating the Turkish Empire. Don’t be surprised if that policy succeeds here, don’t be surprised if they attempt to incorporate into their empire not only the Greek islands but expand further into continental Europe. If Turkey succeeds in this, wait for them in Vienna.”
 
>> Is Turkey a brother in arms or just extending its footprint into Nagorno-Karabakh?
 
The fighting in and around Nagorno-Karabakh is the biggest escalation in years in the decades-long dispute over the region, which lies within Azerbaijan but is controlled by local ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia.
 
Please visit the webpage to view the  full interview.
 
 
 
 
 

Constitutional Court judge Vahe Grigoryan sees need for new candidate for CC President

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 13:26,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Judge of the Constitutional Court of Armenia Vahe Grigoryan has announced that he sees a need for a new candidate for the position of the Court President.

Asked how he reacts to the candidate of Yervand Khundkaryan for the position of the Constitutional Court President, Grigoryan told reporters: “I think we need a new candidate”.

He also informed that during the working session of the Constitutional Court, which is being held from September 23 to now, three-four judges have addressed questions to CC presidential candidate Yervand Khundkaryan.

During the working session on September 24 Yervand Khundkaryan was self-nominated for the Constitutional Court President. Meanwhile, CC judge Hrayr Tovmasyan has nominated Ashot Khachatryan for the position, however, the latter has withdrawn. As a result, Yervand Khundkaryan remained the only candidate for the CC President.

The election of the CC president and vice president will take place through a voting in a closed format.

On September 15 the Armenian Parliament elected Yervand Khundkaryan, Edgar Shatiryan and Artur Vagharshayn as Constitutional Court judges.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Chief of General Staff visits troops at outpost

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 17:57,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Lt. General Onik Gasparyan visited on September 24 troops at the outposts of a military base under the command of the 4th Army Corps, the Defense Ministry said in a news release.

Lt. General Gasparyan was briefed on the tactical situation at the border line and the ongoing engineering and reinforcement works.

The Chief of the General Staff issued directives to the Army Corps commander on increasing the efficiency of combat shifts and encouraged several servicemen for their distinguished service.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

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 17:57,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Lt. General Onik Gasparyan visited on September 24 troops at the outposts of a military base under the command of the 4th Army Corps, the Defense Ministry said in a news release.

Lt. General Gasparyan was briefed on the tactical situation at the border line and the ongoing engineering and reinforcement works.

The Chief of the General Staff issued directives to the Army Corps commander on increasing the efficiency of combat shifts and encouraged several servicemen for their distinguished service.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian defense minister: Azerbaijani president should blame himself

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 21 2020

Armenian Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan has reacted to the latest statement of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev that negotiations over Nagorno-Karabakh are “virtually non-existent.”

“If he does not negotiate, then the negotiations do not exist for him,” the defense chief told reporters at Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan on Monday, September 21, marking the 29th anniversary of Armenia’s independence.

Aliyev had also accused the Armenian authorities of disrupting the process of negotiations.

“He should blame himself instead of blaming the Armenian side,” Tonoyan stressed.

Congratulating Armenians on Independence Day, the minister wished the Armenian people strength and endurance to overcome all challenges.



Azerbaijani press: Turkish Presidential Administration: Any aggression against Azerbaijan – aggression against Turkey

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Sept.20

By Rufiz Hafizoglu – Trend:

Turkey perceives any aggression against Azerbaijan as aggression against Turkey, the Turkish Presidential Administration told Trend.

"As before, we once again declare that, regardless of which way does Azerbaijan choose to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, Ankara will support Azerbaijan with all its resources in this direction," the presidential administration noted.

"We declare once again that the statements of the Armenian authorities and the latest military provocations are aimed at escalating the conflict in the region," the administration said.

Relying on the tacit consent of its patrons, Armenia is trying in every possible way to destabilize the situation in the region, while forgetting that Turkey is also an ally of Azerbaijan, said the administration.

"It is Armenia that is responsible for the instability in the region," the presidential administration said.

The administration noted that the inactivity of the OSCE Minsk Group members prior to the military provocation of Armenia encourages the Armenian authorities.

"The Minsk Group must urgently become active to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, or boldly declare that it is not able to resolve this conflict," the Turkish presidential administration said.

Follow the author on Twitter: @rhafizoglu

Some outfits for Lady Gaga’s “Armenian” video designed by Karina Akopyan

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 19 2020

London-based Russian-Armenian artist Karina Akopyan designed some of the outfits for Lady Gaga’s latest 911 music video inspired by Armenian filmmaker Sergei Parajanov’s 1969 film The Color of Pomegranates.

Karina Akopyan is a Russian born artist and illustrator. According to her website, “Akopyan’s work depicts a world of pain, euphoria, frustration, made up memories and sex fantasies, often a political reference.”

The red-hot latex bra and skirt combo and a bodysuit are among the costumes created by the designer.

“It was lovely to see my work alongside references of one of my favorite filmmakers Sergei Parajanov who inspired my aesthetic in many ways,” Karina Akobyan said on Instagram.

Lady Gaga’s new video is full of references to Parajanov’s classic 1969 art film. When Gaga is first introduced she’s surrounded by actual pomegranates. The poster of the film briefly appears in the video. The word “caution” (զգուշություն) written on a ribbon in Armenian can be seen throughout the short film.

The music video was directed by filmmaker Tarsem Singh, who has frequently cited Parajanov as a major influence.

“This short film is very personal to me, my experience with mental health and the way reality and dreams can interconnect to form heroes within us and all around us,” Lady Gaga said on Instagram.

“Something that was once my real life everyday is now a film, a true story that is now the past and not the present. It’s the poetry of pain,” she added.

The original film is a poetic retelling of the life of 18th-century  Armenian poet and musician Sayat-Nova. Parajanov used little actual dialogue in the film, and most of the story is told through narrative, sound, some music, and occasional title cards.

Below are some shot-for-shot comparisons between the film and “911.”